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Containers were made for gaming. They reduce system overhead, have faster deploy times and empower your development teams to think less about deployment and more about the content they are deploying. It’s no surprise many AAA game developers, like League of Legends’ Riot Games are starting to incorporate them into their devops stack.

Server performance and guaranteed uptime is crucial to game development and adoption. But stability can also come with a tradeoff of reduced innovation and high maintenance costs. Is there a solution for this constant balancing act that CTOs face?

In today’s congested marketplace, launching a new online game presents a series of challenges. It needs to be professionally programmed, be original concept or offer something new and be marketed effectively. Choosing a dependable hosting platform will ensure the game can be accessed without interruptions or downtime to keeping people coming back for more. Find out how in the instructions below:

Virtual reality used to be the topic of conversation whenever anyone talked about the future of game development software and the games which surround it. Even at the Develop Conference 2016 in Brighton, every track had a talk (or seven) which focused on VR. The design, the evolution, the funding, the art, the business, the coding and the marketing of… VR.

Last year, the excavation of a remote site in the New Mexico desert revealed a long-forgotten treasure. Rather than Neolithic remains or fragments of medieval pottery, the excavation team in question exhumed a mound of Atari video game cartridges – buried in 1983, following a dramatic crash in global video game demand.

More than a 100 million monthly players. Just stop and take that figure in. League of Legends hasn’t merely attracted 100 million players who have played the game at some point or another, but 100 million individuals who are playing every month. No other online game even gets close. Valve’s DOTA2 only reaches around 13 million monthly players. Counter-Strike: Global Offensive? Around 23 million players. If the game is attaining and maintaining a vast global audience, Riot’s Massive Online Battle Arena (MOBA) is in a league all of its own.

When video games first hit the arcade, developers built the game from the bottom up – structuring the kernel to fit the technology and specifications available at the time. They were constantly challenged to keep games within tight parameters as the technology battled to keep up with the demands of the software and the burgeoning gaming market.

Which mobile games took their tiny development company from a small room or garage to a mega-conglomerate almost overnight? Bet you can list at least three. Angry Birds, Plants vs. Zombies, Pokémon Go, Clash of Clans – these games are so popular they’ve become household names, and at least two of them have their own soft toy ranges. They are almost the pot of gold at the end of the mobile game development rainbow – who wouldn’t want that level of success?